It needed to be done in 2009. Now it might be too late and a waste of resources.
Yea, maybe it should have happened earlier, but what's the alternative? Just say "screw it, we're too late" and roll over and die? People keep clamoring for Android, but you've got realize how incredibly unlikely that is to happen.
If Apple could make something like PPC to Intel go smooth, RIM can do the same.
Very different situation. What you're talking about here is more like Microsoft porting Windows to ARM, or if Blackberry decided to use a different processor architecture for BBOS. A new OS is a new OS.
Heck, if they modernize their phones they will go from 2008 specs to 2011 specs- about three to four times the overall power. That is enough of a margin to fit a translation or virtualization layer in to ensure backward compatibility. That would turn heads.
The 2011 lineup was a pretty big jump hardware-wise, and the PlayBook's specs match up fine with any of the competition, so I doubt the 2012 QNX phones will be terribly underpowered. We'll see though.
My advice isn't to keep the old crap OS going. My advice is to admit that if you are going to have to throw away backward compatibility and start from scratch it might be better just to look in the mirror and discover that maybe the head-start of competitors requires a "go-along to get along strategy." My advice is that if current BB apps aren't going to work on their next great phone OS than the money for development would be better spent on a custom Android launcher and a BBM port.
Its not going to happen. They'd lose a ton of income potential, and its really a lot harder to do than you think, anyway. The Microsoft deal worked for Nokia because of the very deep partnership Microsoft and Nokia entered into - Nokia isn't going at this alone. I really doubt Google would be willing to help RIM the same way. Plus, they'd lose BES, which is one of their biggest selling points to their existing enterprise customers. I really doubt its that simple to integrate BES into Android.
Well yeah, its like AOL in 2003 in that the slow movers are all that they have left. If they don't appease them then they have to win back early adopters and that means that the QNX Blackberries need to have a NEW killer app (no longer depending on the OLD killer apps). RIM hasn't had a killer app in years.
They've already taken a big step here with the Android app layer. By next year, there should be a lot of Android apps available in App World. If you're a dev, why wouldn't you spend the five minutes it takes to repackage your app for App World? Its not like you actually have to port it, just repackage, submit, and instantly you've got millions more customers.
I guess the main thing I don't understand is: Why did they create the first Blackberry store to begin with? Before they released the first app it was obvious that their platform was a dead end compared to iOS. Why didn't they just put the emphasis on moving to the next OS, waiting to launch their app store when it was going to be the only app store under their brand? Now their platform is faced with a fragmentation problem that makes Android look like OSX, all while they are in fourth place and slipping.
App World released in early 2009 - before there was an iPhone 3GS, when Android only existed on the G1 and Hero (with paltry sales), when Blackberry still had a HUGE chunk of the market that eclipsed Apple's. Things changed a lot in those two years. If you're a RIM exec in 2008, there's no way you say "that's it! We're done!" and throw in the towel. They certainly didn't manage the time in between as well as they should have, but nobody, not even Steve Jobs, would have suggested "Its over for BBOS, scrap it."
I am not anti-Blackberry, I want them to succeed to increase options. I am just thinking if I was an investor of the company I would want every manager or engineer who thought it would be good idea to put resources into the crap app store to be given the pink slip if they can't make those apps work seamlessly on the QNX Blackberries.
I'm sure a lot of people at RIM have and will be fired.
So all those Android app developers who already resubmitted to get in the crap Blackberry store will have to apply to get their app into the non-crap Blackberry store? Or is RIM announcing that it will take some initiative to push their current pile of approved Android-crossover apps into the new marketplace? That would be a pretty bold but needed move.
I'm really not sure what you're asking here. You mean, will they be automatically be porting Blackberry OS apps to App World? Not that I'm aware of, no. However, if you've got an Android app, you literally just package it for App World with a command line tool and submit to the new QNX App World. There's no porting like you would have done to actually move an Android app to BBOS - its just a simple repackaging.